The De-Stress Show That’s #TooCute to Handle

After Monday ends, and the stress of the work week starts, you got to come home and relax.  What better way to relieve your frustrations than watching adorable animals? Especially baby animals. There’s a show I discovered on Netflix Instant last night and I’m currently binge-watching the cuteness that unfolds. Animal Planet’s Too Cute is just what the name implies. It also features puppies and kittens of various breeds during the first 10 weeks of their lives…and it’s ADORABLE. I’ve been spending the entire time going, “Gah!!!!!! Awwww!! Sooo cute!” at the screen. I never knew there were so many breeds of cats and dogs. Thanks to the awesome narrator they have in veteran actor Henry Strozier, it’s fascinatingly educational too. Plus, it’s really entertaining to hear him say really corny dialogue.  It’s the perfect show to relax with in the evening. So go watch some cuteness.

Fun Fact: The show’s narrator,Henry Strozier, is famous for playing the  cranberry farmer in the “Ocean Spray Cranberry Juice” commercials. He is also a narrator for PBS  including  and the show”1900 House.”

Quantum Leap: Acting Exercises in a Television Series

Quantum Leap is an American television series that was broadcast on NBC from March 26, 1989 to May 5, 1993, for a total of five seasons. The series was created by Donald Bellisario, and starred Scott Bakula as Dr. Sam Beckett, a quantum physicist from the near future who becomes lost in time following a time travel experiment, temporarily taking the places of other people to “put right what once went wrong”. Dean Stockwell co-starred as Al Calavicci, Sam’s womanizing, cigar-smoking sidekick and best friend, who appeared as a hologram that only Sam, animals, young children, and the mentally ill could see and hear. The series featured a mix of comedy, drama and melodrama, social commentary, nostalgia, and science fiction, which won it a broad range of fans. One of its trademarks is that at the end of each episode, Sam “leaps” into the setting for the next episode, usually uttering a dismayed “Oh, boy!”–Wikipedia.com

There’s one thing Wikipedia left out. It’s one of the greatest television series to incorporate basic acting exercises. When actors were little kids, they probably played “make believe” like all the other children. What we actors didn’t realize at the time was, we were actually doing some of the most basic acting exercises. We’d play the teacher, the mother, even the animal. One of the theater/improv games I still enjoy is “freeze” where a performer is able to tag anyone out of the scene and start a new scene. Essentially, that’s what Quantum Leap was as a series. The main character is often disoriented and needs time to re-gain their footing and adjust accordingly to the circumstances around him. Scott Bakula played everything from a young kid, to an animal, even a different gender and race without the use of special effects or offensive makeup. He played the characters as they were, all of the time, we as an audience were seeing him as he actually looked. The most basic of acting games was now utilized in a complex television series.

What I love is that Bakula was able to play all these different characters while maintaining is primary character of Sam. However, the most interesting parts may just come from the supporting cast around him. The actors who had to act alongside Bakula and treat him as if he were a kid, woman, animal or gangster. It’s amazing to look at the series from an acting perspective because it reminds me of scene study classes. Part of me wishes that all series were as amazing as this one. If you’re an actor, watch it. It’s a great learning tool and a wonderful reminder how much fun pretending is.